NARRATION: They are everywhere in our daily lives - often where we least
expect them.

DR. PHILIP LANDRIGAN, CHAIRMAN, PREVENTIVE MEDICINE, MT. SINAI SCHOOL
OF MEDICINE: We are conducting a vast toxicologic experiment, and we are
using our children as the experimental animals.

NARRATION: Not a single child today is born free of synthetic chemicals.

AL MEYERHOFF, FORMER ATTORNEY FOR THE NATURAL RESOURCES DEFENSE COUNCIL:
With chemicals, it's shoot first and ask questions later.

NARRATION: We think we are protected but, in fact, chemicals are presumed
safe - innocent - until proven guilty.

SANDY BUCHANAN, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, OHIO CITIZEN ACTION: Years of documents
have shown that they knew they were hurting people, much like the tobacco
industry.

PROFESSOR GERALD MARKOWITZ Ph.D, JOHN JAY COLLEGE: Historians don't
like to use broad political terms like "cover-up," but there's really
no other term that you can use for this.

NARRATION: In this special investigation, we will reveal the secrets
that a powerful industry has kept hidden for almost fifty years.

TRADE SECRETS: A Moyers Report

PROLOGUE:

NARRATION: There is a three-hundred mile stretch along the coast where
Texas and Louisiana meet that boasts the largest collection of petrochemical
refineries and factories in the world.

Many who live and work here call it "Cancer Alley."

RAY REYNOLDS: Many, many nights we were walking through vapor clouds
and you could see it. You know how a hot road looks down a long straight?
Well, that's exactly what it looks like - wavy. We would complain about
it, and they would pacify us by saying, there's no long term problem.
You might have an immediate reaction like nausea, but that's only normal.
Don't worry about it.

NARRATION: In the living room of his house a few miles from the chemical
plant where he worked for 16 years, Ray Reynolds waits out the last days
of his life. He is 43 years old. Toxic neuropathy - poisoning - has spread
from his nerve cells to his brain.

MOYERS: What's the prognosis? How long do they give you?

REYNOLDS: They don't. There's too many variables, and there's too much
unknown about it.

NARRATION: Dan Ross had no doubt about what made him sick. Neither does
his wife of 25 years, Elaine.

ELAINE ROSS: Went to a dance one night, and he walked in the door, and
I had never seen him before, didn't know what his name was or anything,
and he started shooting pool with a bunch of his friends, and the friend
that I was with, I told him, I said, "That's who I'll spend the rest of
my life with."

MOYERS: Love at first sight?

ROSS: Uh huh.

MOYERS: Did he think that?

ROSS: No.

MOYERS: You had to, had to...

ROSS: I had to persuade him. When we got married, he was still in the
Air Force, so he spent eighteen months overseas. When he got back, he
had an eighteen-month-old daughter. And so probably the main thing was,
he was worried about making a living for everybody, for us.

NARRATION: The plant where Dan Ross made that living produces the raw
vinyl chloride that is basic to the manufacture of PVC plastic.

ROSS: Danny worked for them 23 years - and every single day that he
worked, he was exposed. Not one day was he not exposed.

As the years went by, you could see it on his face. He started to get
this hollow look under his eyes, and he always smelled. I could always
smell the chemicals on him. I could even smell it on his breath after
a while. But even up until he was diagnosed the first time, he said, "They'll
take care of me. They're my friends."

NARRATION: In 1989, Dan Ross was told he had a rare form of brain cancer.

ROSS: He and I never believed in suing anybody. You just don't sue people.
And I was looking for answers. Since I couldn't find a cure, I wanted
to know what caused it.

NARRATION: Looking for an answer, she found something that raised more
questions instead.

ROSS: I was just going through some of his papers, and I found this
exposure record. It tells you what the amount was that he was exposed
to in any given day.

MOYERS: Somebody's written on here, "Exceeds short-term exposure." What
does that mean?

ROSS: That it was over the acceptable limit that the government allows.
So this exceeded what he should have been exposed to that day.

NARRATION: There was also a hand-written instruction.

MOYERS: And then there's writing that says?

ROSS: "Do not include on wire to Houston."

MOYERS: Don't send this to the headquarters?

ROSS: Right.

ROSS: My question was: Why wasn't it included - why was it held up from
going to Houston?

MOYERS: What did you take that to mean?

ROSS: Somebody's trying to cover something up. Why?

NARRATION: Her discovery led Dan and Elaine Ross to sue.

ROSS: And I promised him that they would never, ever forget who he was,
ever.

DOCUMENT WAREHOUSE

NARRATION: And this is the result of that vow.

MOYERS: How long did it take you to gather all this?

WILLIAM BAGGETT, JR, ATTORNEY: Ten years.

NARRATION: Over those ten years, attorney William Baggett, Jr. waged
a legal battle for the Rosses that included charges of conspiracy against
companies producing vinyl chloride. Dan's employers - and most of the
companies - have now settled. But the long legal discovery led deeper
and deeper into the inner chambers of the chemical industry and its Washington
trade association. More than a million pages of documents were eventually
unearthed.

In these rooms is the legacy of Dan Ross.

We asked to examine the documents buried in these boxes - and discovered
a shocking story.

It is a story we were never supposed to know - secrets that go back
to the beginning of the chemical revolution.

NARRATION: It was love at first sight. In the decade after World War
II, Americans opened their arms to the wonders of chemistry.

Synthetic chemicals were invented to give manufacturers new materials
- like plastic.

Pesticides like DDT were advertised as miracle chemicals that would
eradicate crop pests - and mosquitoes.

The industry boomed.

Since then, tens of thousands of new chemicals have been created, turned
into consumer products or released into the environment. We use them to
raise and deliver our food. We clean our carpets and our clothes with
them. Plastics carry everything from spring water to cooking oil. They're
in our shower curtains and in our blood bags. They are the material of
choice in our children's toys.

But there are risks that come with the benefits of the chemical revolution.

MT. SINAI SCHOOL OF MEDICINE

MOYERS: In this arm?

NURSE: Preferably, if that's where your vain is good at.

NARRATION: Specialists in public health at the Mt. Sinai School of Medicine
in New York - led by Dr. Michael McCally - are trying to assess how many
synthetic chemicals are in our bodies. For the purpose of this broadcast,
I volunteered take part in their study. A much larger project is underway
at the US Centers for Disease Control.

MOYERS: And you're looking for chemicals?

DR. MICHAEL McCALLY, VICE-CHAIRMAN, PREVENTIVE MEDICINE, MT. SINAI SCHOOL
OF MEDICINE: Not the body's normal chemicals. We're looking for industrial
chemicals, things that weren't around 100 years ago, that your grandfather
didn't have in his blood or fat. We're looking for those chemicals that
have been put into the environment, and through environmental exposures
- things we eat, things we breathe, water we drink - are now incorporated
in our bodies that just weren't there.

MOYERS: You really think you will find chemicals in my body?

McCALLY: Oh yes...no question. No question.

DOCUMENTS

NARRATION: These secret documents reveal that the risks were known from
the beginning. The chemical industry knew much more about its miracle
products than it was telling. And one of the most toxic was vinyl chloride
- the chemical Dan Ross was working with.

PROFESSOR GERALD MARKOWITZ Ph.D., JOHN JAY COLLEGE: One of the indications
they knew they should have been telling the work force and public about
this is that they mark all these documents "secret," "confidential." They
tell each other in these documents - "Keep this within the company, do
not tell anybody else about this problem." So they know this is dynamite.

NARRATION: Gerald Markowitz and David Rosner are historians of public
health in New York. They were retained by two law firms to study the Ross
archive.

DAVID ROSNER, Ph.D., COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY: They certainly never expected
historians to be able to look into the inner workings of their trade association
and their vinyl chloride committee meetings and the planning for their
attempts to cover up and to basically obscure their role in these workers'
deaths.

"We have been investigating vinyl chloride a bit. ... We feel quite
confident that 500 parts per million is going to produce rather appreciable
injury when inhaled 7 hours a day, five days a week for an extended period."

NARRATION: It is early correspondence among industry medical officers
who were studying the effects of working with vinyl chloride. At the time,
workers were regularly exposed to at least 500 parts per million.

November 24, 1959. Inter-company Correspondence, Union Carbide.

"An off-the record phone call from V.K. Rowe gives me incomplete data
on their current repeated inhalation study. ...Vinyl chloride monomer
is more toxic than has been believed."

NARRATION: BF Goodrich was one of the vinyl chloride producers in on
the industry's private conversations.

BERNARD SKAGGS: I started there in June--it was June the 3rd, 1955.

MOYERS: '55.

SKAGGS: Uh-huh.

MOYERS: When you began, did you think the work might be dangerous?

SKAGGS: No. They told us it wasn't. The only thing we had to watch about
the vinyl chloride was not getting enough of it pass out.

NARRATION: Fresh out of the Army, Bernard Skaggs went to work at the
BF Goodrich plant in Louisville, Kentucky.

There, vinyl chloride gas was turned into a dough-like mixture that
was then dried and processed into the raw material for PVC plastic. Bernie
Skaggs' job was to climb into the giant vats that spun and mixed the vinyl
chloride - and chip off what was left behind. Workers called it "kettle
crud."

SKAGGS: There was vinyl chloride everywhere. The valve, overhead valves
had charging valves over there where the vinyl chloride was pumped into
the reactors. All of those leaked and dripped. Most of them dripped on
the floor all the time. They said it had to be - I think it was - 1,500
parts per million before you could smell it. Not only could you smell
it, you could see it. It would - it would get into a vapor, and through
the sunlight it waved, waves, and you see it. It was all the time that
way.

My hands began to get sore, and they began to swell some. My fingers
got so sore on the ends, I couldn't button a shirt, couldn't dial a phone.
And I had thick skin like it was burned all over the back of my hand,
back of my fingers, all the way up under my arm, almost to my armpit.
And after enough time, I got thick places on my face right under my eyes...

"Gentlemen: There is no question but that skin lesions, absorption of
bone of the terminal joints of the hands, and circulatory changes can
occur in workers associated with the polymerization of PVC."

NARRATION: In other words, they knew vinyl chloride could cause the
bones in the hands of their workers to dissolve.

"Of course, the confidentiality of this data is exceedingly important."

MOYERS: What does this memo tell you? This particular memo?

ROSNER: Oh, it tells me the industry never expected that they would
be held accountable to the public about what was happening to the work
force. They never even expected their workers to learn of the problems
that they were facing and the causes of it.

NARRATION: Bernie Skaggs' hands were eventually X-rayed.

SKAGGS: I was really shocked.

MOYERS: What did you see?

SKAGGS: Well, on the hands, my fingers were all--you know, showed up--the
bones showed up white in the x-ray.

MOYERS: In a normal x-ray.

SKAGGS: Yeah, normal x-ray, yeah. And mine were okay till they got out
to this first joint out there. Then from there out, most of it was black.
Some of them had a little half moon around the end, and then just a little
bit beyond the joint. And I said, "What is that? You've really surprised
me." He said, "That--the bone is being destroyed."

MOYERS: The black showed that there was no bone there.

SKAGGS: Yeah, right. The bone was disappearing, just gone.

MOYERS: Dissolving?

SKAGGS: Yeah.

RICHARD LEMEN Ph.D., FORMER DEPUTY DIRECTOR, NIOSH: It was the slowness
of action on the industry's part that was the most striking issue in reviewing
these documents.

NARRATION: Dr. Richard Lemen was deputy director of the National Institute
for Occupational Safety and Health until he retired five years ago. The
Baggett law firm hired him to analyze the secret documents.

LEMEN: The basic tenet of public health is to prevent, once you have
found something, immediately stop exposure.

MOYERS: So they should have told the workers right then.

LEMEN: They absolutely should have told the workers. Even if it was
only a suspicion, they should have told the workers what they knew and
what they could do to prevent their exposure to what they thought was
causing the disease.

NARRATION: That is not what happened. BF Goodrich did not tell the workers,
even though its own medical consultants were reporting the truth.

October 6, 1966

"The clinical manifestations are such as to suggest the possibility
of a disabling disease as a later development."

NARRATION: What the company's advisers feared was that the dissolving
hand bones could be a warning of something even more serious.

"May be a systemic disease as opposed to a purely localized disease
(fingers). ...They (Goodrich) are worried about possible long term effect
on body tissue especially if it proves to be systemic."

MOYERS: "...proves to be systemic." What's that saying? Interpret that
for a layman.

LEMEN: What that's saying is that this disease may be much beyond just
the fingertips, that it could have effects on other organs in the body
or other parts of the body.

MARKOWITZ: If all the doctor is looking for is concerns about tops of
the fingers and has not been told in the medical literature that this
might be a systemic disease, that this information is kept within the
chemical industry, then that worker is going to be misdiagnosed. The worker's
condition is going to get worse, and there is no telling what the effects
are going to be for that worker.

MOYERS: He could die not knowing what had killed him.

MARKOWITZ: Absolutely.

NARRATION: Goodrich executives did tell other companies what was happening.
But they hoped...

"They hope all will use discretion in making the problem public. ...They
particularly want to avoid exposes like Silent Spring and Unsafe at Any
Speed."

MARKOWITZ: They understand the implications of what is before them and
they are faced with a situation that could explode at any minute, and
they are...

MOYERS: Politically.

MARKOWITZ: Politically, culturally, economically - this could affect
their whole industry if people feel that this plastic could represent
a real hazard to the work force, and if it could present a hazard to the
work force, people are going to wonder, consumers are going to wonder
what is the impact that it could have for me.

WASHINGTON, D.C.

NARRATION: On April 30, 1969 - ten years after Bernie Skaggs first complained
to the company doctor about the pain in his hands - members of the industry's
trade association met at their Washington offices. On the agenda was a
report from a group of medical researchers they had hired.

Confidential. Recommendations.

"The association between reactor cleaning and the occurrence of acroosteolysis
is sufficiently clear cut. The severity of exposure of reactor cleaner
to vinyl chloride should be kept at a minimum..."

NARRATION: The advisers recommended that exposure to vinyl chloride
be reduced by ninety per cent - from 500 parts per million to 50 parts
per million. But the Occupational Health Committee rejected the recommendation.

"A motion to accept the report as submitted was defeated by a vote
of 7 to 3."

NARRATION: Instead, they changed the report.

"Eliminate the last sentence 'Sufficient ventilation should be provided
to reduce the vinyl chloride concentration below 50 parts per million.'"

MOYERS: What's stunning to me is that at this meeting were, representing
the companies, many people with MDs behind their name, MD the chairman,
MD the vice chairman, MD, MD, MD. And they were among those voting against
the researchers who had said we've got a problem here.

LEMEN: I think that that reflects who the medical doctor's patient really
was. Was their patient the workers in the plant - or were they representing
their employer? This is a fundamental problem that we've had in public
health for a long time - and that is, who is more important? Is it the
chemical being produced or is it the human being producing the chemical?

NARRATION: For ten years, the bones in his fingers were disappearing.
In that time, the industry never told him what it knew. Bernie Skaggs
was kept in the dark - until a few months ago, when we handed him one
of the secret documents.

MOYERS: There it is, in black and white. Do you want to read it?

SKAGGS: "There is no question but that skin lesions, absorption of bone
of the terminal joints of the hands and circulatory changes can occur
in workers associated with polymerization of PVC."

MOYERS: That was describing the condition you had.

SKAGGS: Right, right.

MOYERS: At the same time they were -

SKAGGS: They were resisting anything -

MOYERS: They didn't say they knew anything -

SKAGGS: And that bothers me, you know. Well, to think that they'd be
this dishonest with me. After all of these years - and I put 37-1/2 years
in that place - and that they could be dishonest enough not to even ever
admit to me that what they did and what they had was what caused my problem.

MOYERS: Then there's another. Let me read this. The consultants said
"This may be a systemic disease, as opposed to a purely localized disease."

SKAGGS : This is the first I've heard of this. I didn't know that. The
company did a good job of I guess I'd call it brain washing. They actually
told us, and they told us this, that this vinyl chloride won't hurt you.

MOYERS: What do you think when you look at all these documents?

SKAGGS: Makes me more bitter than I was.

NARRATION: By the early 1970s, Dustin Hoffman had been famously advised
in the movie, "The Graduate," that "plastics" was the future. But the
vinyl chloride industry was hearing something else.

A scientist at an Italian plant, Dr. P.L. Viola, had exposed laboratory
rats to vinyl chloride - and discovered cancer. As he steadily lowered
the exposure levels in his tests, the cancer persisted. The discovery
cast a pall over the promising future of plastic.

NARRATION: On November 16, 1971, the men from twenty vinyl chloride-producing
companies gathered at the Hotel Washington to discuss the bad news.

"Publishing of Dr. Viola's work in the US could lead to serious problems
with regard to the vinyl chloride monomer industry."

MOYERS: How would you characterize the industry discussion?

ROSNER: Close to panic. There is a whole new ball game out there about
who is going to regulate industry, how much influence industry will have
over these agencies, and the discovery of cancer, of course, is, you know,
potentially not only a public relations disaster, but a regulatory disaster
for this industry.

NARRATION: At the meeting, one of the European industry's own scientists
presented an even more disturbing report.

"Doctor LeFevre theorizes that vinyl chloride is absorbed in body
fats and carried to the brain."

NARRATION: Despite the startling prospect that vinyl chloride could
affect the brain, the companies took no action - and told no one.

"The present political climate in the US is such that a campaign
by Mr. R. Nader and others could force an industrial upheaval via new
laws or strict interpretation of pollution and occupational health laws."

NARRATION: A year later, another Italian researcher, Dr. Cesare Maltoni,
found evidence of a rare liver cancer - angiosarcoma. In studies sponsored
by the European industry, cancer appeared in rats exposed to levels of
vinyl chloride common on factory floors in the US. The panicked industry
came running.

MARKOWITZ: Two or three American representatives of the chemical industry
go over to Bologna and the Europeans tell them that there are cancers
now not only at the very high levels, at thousands of parts per million,
but down to 250 parts per million. And yet they are determined to keep
this secret. And they go so far as to even sign a secrecy agreement between
the Europeans and the Americans so that each of their researchers will
be secret from everybody outside the industry.

MOYERS: They get together, the American representatives and the European
representatives, and they say this is top secret, we are not going to
make it public...

MARKOWITZ: Exactly. They...

MOYERS: ...to anybody? To the workers?

MARKOWITZ: To the workers.

MOYERS: To the doctors?

MARKOWITZ: To the doctors. No one is going to get this information except
the companies who have signed the secrecy agreement.

NARRATION: Conoco, BF Goodrich, Dow, Shell, Ethyl, Union Carbide - some
of the founding fathers of the chemical revolution - were among those
who signed the secrecy agreement, even as they were admitting to themselves
the bad news.

NARRATION: The companies knew. Working with vinyl chloride - even at
low levels of exposure - could cause cancer.

WASHINGTON, DC

NARRATION: By 1973, the federal government was trying to catch up with
the chemical revolution.

A new agency - the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
- NIOSH - published an official request seeking all health and safety
information regarding vinyl chloride.

Two months later, a staff member of the industry's trade association
sent a letter to member companies urging that they tell NIOSH about Dr.
Maltoni's findings.

March 26, 1973

"There is the aspect of moral obligation not to withhold from the Government
significant information having occupational and environmental relevance...
"

MCA BUILDING

May 21, 1973. Manufacturing Chemists Association. Minutes of meeting.

NARRATION: But meeting in their conference room in Washington, they
discussed keeping secret what they knew of the dangers posed by vinyl
chloride.

"We should not volunteer reference to the European project, but in
response to direct inquiry, we could not deny awareness of the project
and knowledge concerning certain preliminary results."

MARKOWITZ: It is an extraordinary situation where they know they should
be telling the Government about this problem. They know that they are
wrong not to tell them. And then they admit that their engaging in this
kind of activity can be legitimately seen as evidence of an illegal conspiracy.

May 31, 1973. Union Carbide. Internal Correspondence. Confidential.

NARRATION: A Union Carbide executive reported to corporate headquarters
that if the March letter admitting knowledge of Maltoni's work ever became
public, it could...

"could be construed as evidence of an illegal conspiracy by industry...if
the information were not made public or at least made available to the
government."

ROSNER: You kind of avoid as a historian the idea that there are conspiracies
or that there are people planning the world in a certain way. You just
try to avoid that because it's--it seems too--too unreal and too frightening
in its implications. Yet, when you look at these documents, you say yes,
there are people who understood what was going on, people who thought
about the crisis that was engulfing them or about to engulf them and tried
in every which way to get out of that crisis and actually to, in some
sense, to suppress an issue.

MOYERS: Do you think all of this added up to, to use your word, a conspiracy?

ROSNER: In a moral sense, I think it was a conspiracy.

NARRATION: We have learned from the secret archive that when the industry
met with NIOSH, it did not mention Maltoni or angiosarcoma.

Union Carbide. Internal Correspondence. Confidential.

"The presentation was extremely well received and ...the chances of
precipitous action by NIOSH on vinyl chloride were materially lessened.
NIOSH did not appear to want to alienate a cooperative industry."

MARKOWITZ: Historians don't like to use broad political terms like "cover-up,"
but there is really no other term you can use for this because the industry
had the information. They knew the significance of the information they
had, and they refused to tell the Government because they were afraid
the Government would take action to protect the work force.

MOYERS: And yet, during this time, Dan Ross and others like him, working
in vinyl chloride plants, were being told there was nothing to worry about,
that there is no danger.

MARKOWITZ: That's correct. The industry kept assuring the work force
that there was not anything that they need to be concerned about and that
they were going to protect the work force.

MOYERS: But they didn't.

MARKOWITZ: No, they certainly did not.

LAKE CHARLES, LOUISIANA

NARRATION: The companies involved were among those producing more than
five billion pounds of vinyl chloride every year - and they were expanding.
In 1967, one of them - Conoco - was finishing construction of a new complex
in Lake Charles, Louisiana. Dan Ross moved his family into a small house
less than a quarter of a mile from the new plant's back door.

ELAINE ROSS: He went to work there, he started as a pumper loader. And
he moved up fast in the first year that he was there.

MOYERS: He was eager for hard work or...

ROSS: Or he was smart, he was smart, and a hard worker.

NARRATION: Another early hire at Conoco was Everett Hoffpauir - who
took the job shortly after he returned from serving in Vietnam.

EVERETT HOFFPAUIR: We were in the start-up phase, and early operation
phase, and they were getting all the bugs out of it, and we had a lotta
releases, and we had a lotta problems. Prevailing attitude with management
at the time was "Let's get it back online; downtime is killing us." So
as long as it wasn't gonna blow sumpin' up, go on in there and do what
you gotta do.

MOYERS: You were breathing it?

HOFFPAUIR: We were breathing it, get higher than a Georgia pine sucking
on it, you know. It's very intoxicating. It's a lot like propane or any
other light end, it's aromatic and, like I say, it did give you a buzz
if you stayed in it long enough.

Their attitude was, if you don't wanna do the job, there's four waitin'
at the gate waiting to take your job. Do it - or else.

Vietnam was winding down, had a lot of people that weren't working or
if they were, were working for a lot less money. And plant jobs were very
attractive. So if you didn't want to do the work, just say so - somebody's
waitin' to take your place.

MOYERS: So you'd worry more about your job than about your health?

HOFFPAUIR: Well, sure you were. I had a wife and three kids at home
that I had to feed, you know. Yeah. But nobody told you it was a real
health hazard, so you didn't worry about it.

NARRATION: But the companies were worried.

December 14, 1971. Ad hoc planning group for Vinyl Chloride Research.

NARRATION: To counter the damaging information from the European animal
studies, the industry commissioned a confidential study of its own workers
that it planned to use in its defense.

"The need to be able to assure the employees of the industry that
management was concerned for, and diligent in seeking the information
necessary to protect their health. The need to develop data useful in
defense of the industry against invalid claims for injury for alleged
occupational or community exposure."

MARKOWITZ: They are telling the scientists this is what we want. They
are giving them the money to do the research, and the scientists know
that in the end, they have got to come up with something that is approximate
to what their funders are interested in.

MOYERS: In other words, they were saying to the epidemiologists, the
researchers, the scientists, here is the end we want. Produce the science
to get us there.

ROSNER: That's right.

MARKOWITZ: When research is conducted in that way where you are trying
to protect the industry, rather than give the industry the information
it needs to protect the work force and the public, the process of science
is absolutely corrupted.

LEMEN: Good science is to design a study that will determine whether
or not there is an effect from the exposure to the chemical. And you should
design that study with the greatest amount of power, the greatest amount
of ability to detect whether or not there is an effect. Therefore, you
should study those workers that are most directly exposed and eliminate
workers that don't have exposure. That was not done.

MOYERS: Go to the pool of affected workers, not the pool of workers
who might be on the margin of the process.

LEMEN: Absolutely. They didn't do that. They included workers in their
study that were probably not ever exposed to vinyl chloride.

MOYERS: So if you bring in secretaries and managers or people out driving
trucks, you're diluting the impact of your study.

LEMEN: Absolutely. Absolutely. And you can't get a true result when
you do something like that.

NARRATION: The researchers were restricted to studying employment records
and death certificates. They did not interview the workers themselves.

MARKOWITZ: They were in, from their perspective, a terrible bind. They
wanted the information to know if the workers had suffered any injury
as a result of exposure to vinyl chloride, but they didn't want to tell
the workers that they might have been exposed to vinyl chloride and that
there was a danger in that exposure. So they didn't want to even alert
the workers in any form through these surveys that they might have had
a problem that they should investigate themselves, that they should consult
with their doctors about, that they should be worried about.

NARRATION: The confidential documents reveal other efforts that affected
the outcome.

"Several companies have indicated that they do not wish their terminated
employees to be contacted directly."

LEMEN: If you have workers that have left employment, they may have
left because they were sick. They may have left because they had had some
reason to leave. And excluding them from the study gives you a very biased
result.

NARRATION: The companies also worried that if researchers contacted
the families of workers who had died, someone might get suspicious.

"This becomes even more complicated when one seeks information from
relatives of past employees who have subsequently died. ...In other words,
we need the information, but at what risk."

ROSNER: I think this is how we, as historians, are looking at it. If
you could keep that knowledge secret, keep the causes secret, keep the
information secret for long enough, workers will die of other things,
they'll vanish from the work force, they'll go on to other places, they'll
retire and die of diseases that may or may not be directly linked to the
experience in the workplace.

MOYERS: How are lay people like me, citizens, supposed to decide what
is good and what is bad science?

LEMEN: That's hard. It's real hard. Science is easy to manipulate.

NARRATION: In the end, the industry got a report that said what it wanted.

Lake Charles, Louisiana. PPG/Vista.

"Study after study has confirmed there is no evidence that vinyl
affects human health - not for workers in the industry, not for people
living near vinyl-related manufacturing facilities, not for those who
use the hundreds of vinyl consumer and industrial products."

NARRATION: So workers like Dan Ross were not told why they were getting
sick.

ROSS: He came home from work one day, and he was taking off his boots
and socks, and I looked at his feet. The whole top of 'em were burned.
Now, he had on safety boots, steel-toed, and the whole top of his feet
were red where the chemicals had gone through his boots, through his socks,
under his feet, and burned them, both feet.

MOYERS: You knew that chemicals had caused it?

ROSS: Oh, yeah. There was no doubt in his mind, because he had been
standing in something. I don't remember what it was. I said, "My God,
what was it that goes through leather, steel-toed boots and your socks
to do that?" You know, I said, "Don't get in it again, whatever it was.
Don't get in it again."

HOFFPAUIR: I got chlorine gas and I went to the hospital, but, you know,
it, it was just part a the - it wasn't an everyday thing that you got
chlorine. It was a everyday thing you got vinyl and EDC. Chlorine's a
bad, "bad news doctor" there. It'll hurt ya. But you weren't aware. You
knew that instantly. You weren't aware that this insidious little monster
was creeping up on you, vinyl chloride was creeping up on you and eating
your brain away. And that's what it all tended out to prove out that it
was doing. Just eating your brain up. Who was to know? No one told us.
No one made us aware of it.

MOYERS: We can't live in a risk-free society, can we?

HOFFPAUIR: No, we can't live in a risk-free society. But we can live
in an honest society.

NARRATION: The chemical industry was not being honest with its workers.
And it was not being honest with the public.

In beauty parlors across America, hairdressers and their customers were
using new aerosol sprays. No one told them they were inhaling toxic gas
at exposure levels much higher than on the factory floor.

ROSNER: Vinyl chloride is a gas, and it is used as a propellant in hairsprays,
in deodorants at that time, in a whole slew of pesticides and other cans
that are propelling chemicals out into the environment. So, if it turns
out that this relatively low threshold limit is poisoning workers, what
is the potential danger if it ends up poisoning consumers?

NARRATION: Once again, buried in the documents, is the truth the industry
kept hidden.

March 24, 1969. BF Goodrich Chemical Company Subject: Some new information.

"Calculations have been made to show the concentration of propellant
in a typical small hair dresser's room. ...All of this suggests that beauty
operators may be exposed to concentrations of vinyl chloride monomer equal
to or greater than the level in our polys."

NARRATION: The threat of lawsuits gave the industry second thoughts
about marketing aerosols.

Union Carbide. Internal Correspondence. Confidential.

"If vinyl chloride proves to be hazardous to health, a producing company's
liability to its employees is limited by various Workmen's Compensation
laws. A company selling vinyl chloride..."

MOYERS: "A company selling vinyl chloride as an aerosol propellant,
however, has essentially unlimited liability to the entire U.S. population."
What does that mean?

ROSNER: The problem that they're identifying is the giant elephant in
the corner. It's the issue of what happens when worker's comp isn't there
to shield them from suits in court, what happens if people who are not
covered by worker's comp suddenly get exposed to vinyl chloride and begin
to sue them for damages to their health.

MOYERS: Unlimited liability.

ROSNER: Unlimited liability. Millions and millions of women, of workers,
of people exposed to monomer in all sorts of forms. This is catastrophic.
This is potentially catastrophic.

Interoffice Memo. Ethyl Corporation.

"Dow ... is questioning the aspect of making sales of vinyl chloride
monomer when the known end use is as an aerosol propellant since market
is small but potential liability is great."

ROSNER: They consciously note that this is a very small portion of the
vinyl chloride market. So why expose themselves to liability if this minor
part of the industry can be excised and the huge liability that goes with
it excised?

"Concerning use of vinyl chloride monomer as aerosol propellant, serious
consideration should be given to withdrawal from this market."

MARKOWITZ: Here you have the industry saying we are going to give up
this part of the industry, the aerosol part of the industry, because the
liability is so great. But they are not going to inform the work force.
They are not going to do anything about protecting the work force because
the liability is limited for them. And so it's a very cynical way of deciding
on how you are going to deal with this dangerous product.

They have put people in danger. They have exposed a variety of people
to a dangerous product, and, yet, they are not willing to say this is
something we did, we didn't know it, we, you know, had no way of knowing
it, whatever excuses they wanted to make up, but they don't even do that.

NARRATION: Some companies would give up the aerosol business - but quietly.
No public warning was issued. Now, 30 years later, those hairdressers
and their customers are unaware of the risks to which they were exposed.
And it is impossible to know how many women may have been sick or died
- without knowing why.

LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY

NARRATION: 1974. B.F. Goodrich announced that four workers at its Louisville,
Kentucky, vinyl chloride plant had died from angiosarcoma - the rare liver
cancer uncovered by Dr. Maltoni. A link to their jobs could not be denied.

But neither workers nor the public knew that the companies had kept
from them the clear connection between the chemical and the cancer.

WORKER # 1: My test came back bad and I'm only 26 years old, couple
of young kids, really scares you.

NARRATION: When news of the four deaths broke, two hundred seventy employees
were tested. Blood abnormalities showed up in fifty-five of them.

WORKER # 2: Fifty per cent of the guys I worked with in the late fifties
aren't around now, and that's a twenty year period. And I've been here
twenty and a half years.

WORKER #3: It just kindly upsets me and my wife, naturally, and my mother.
It's - I know it's a problem. It's, it's, it's just - what do you do?

NARRATION: The company provided no answers. But experts like Dr. Irving
Selikoff, the country's leading specialist in occupational disease, rushed
to Louisville.

WORKER #4: Have they found anything besides cancer that vinyl chloride
might cause? Or have you all looked for anything besides cancer?

DR. IRVING SELIKOFF: The liver can be affected even besides cancer.
Scarring can occur in the liver. Fibrosis. The blood vessels can break,
the veins can break, and you can get a fatal hemorrhage, even.

WORKER #5: Once you have found that a man has this cancer caused from
vinyl chloride, will you be able to cure it?

SELIKOFF: The answer is, no. At this moment, we do not know how to cure
angiosarcoma.

BERNARD SKAGGS: My opinion is, if the liver thing had not come to the
forefront, I don't think they would have ever admitted anything.

MOYERS: If those guys hadn't died.

SKAGGS: If they hadn't died. I'm thinking about those people that I
knew that died needlessly. I'm the fortunate one. I've lived through it.
I've survived it. Some of them were cut off in their youth. I mean, they
were young people.

NARRATION: Nine months later - over the objections of industry - the
government ordered workplace exposure to vinyl chloride reduced to one
part per million.

NARRATION: The aftershocks of the chemical revolution resounded throughout
the 1970s. New words began to enter our vocabulary.

In Missouri, oil contaminated with dioxin had been sprayed on the dirt
streets of a small working class town. When flood waters spread the poison
everywhere, the entire population was evacuated.

In upstate New York, where homes had been built on a long-abandoned
chemical dump, children were being born with birth defects. Love Canal
was declared a disaster area.

Scientists looking for PCBs found them everywhere - in the mud of lakes
and rivers, in birds and fish, and so up into the food chain. They showed
up in cow's milk in Indiana and mother's milk in New York.

These modern poisons were not only widespread - but long-lasting.

BENZENE

NARRATION: Then came the benzene scare. Although it was known to be
toxic, its use in gasoline helped fuel the American economy. But as evidence
mounted connecting benzene to leukemia, the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration - OSHA - ordered that workplace exposure be lowered to
one part per million - a regulation the industry, then producing 11 billion
pounds a year, would challenge.

DR. PHILIP LANDRIGAN, CHAIRMAN, PREVENTIVE MEDICINE, MT. SINAI SCHOOL
OF MEDICINE: It's almost inevitable that when a chemical becomes part
of the political process that its regulation is going to be delayed. A
chemical that has no commercial value is easy to regulate.

NARRATION: To counter the proposed regulation with its own science,
the industry created and funded a $500,000 "Benzene Program Panel."

PETER INFANTE, Ph.D., DIRECTOR OF STANDARDS REVIEW, OSHA: The science
at the time was that a) benzene caused leukemia. I think there was no
question about that.

MOYERS: There was no doubt in your mind that workers were at risk who
were using benzene in those plants?

INFANTE: There was no doubt at all in most scientists that I spoke with.
I think the only ones that had a contrary view were some scientists that
represented the industry.

NARRATION: Again, the documents reveal that, just as with vinyl chloride,
the industry's own medical officers had known of benzene's toxicity for
a very long time.

MOYERS: Here's an internal memo from 1958, 43 years ago, from Esso Oil's
medical research division. This came out of their own medical center.
Quote: "Most authorities agree the only level which can be considered
absolutely safe for prolonged exposure is zero." What does that say to
you?

INFANTE: There's certainly information that the medical department has,
and that information, you know, is not being conveyed to the workers,
and that information is not being used to modify behavior by the company.

NARRATION: Instead of changing its behavior, the petrochemical industry
turned to the courts to stop the regulation. The companies argued that
reducing exposure to benzene would be too costly.

October 11, 1977

"We assert that there is no evidence that leukemia has resulted from
exposure to benzene at the current concentration limits. The new and lower
limitation on exposure would represent an intolerable misallocation of
economic resources."

NARRATION: The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans - in America's
petrochemical heartland - ruled that the government had not proved the
danger to humans to be great enough to justify the cost to industry. The
victory propelled an offensive directed by the now re-named Chemical Manufacturers
Association.

September, 1979. A Summary of Progress. Presented to the Board of
Directors.

"Gentlemen, this is a campaign that has the dimension and detail of
a war. This is war - not a battle. The dollars expended on offense are
token compared to future costs.

"The rewards are the court decisions we have won, the regulations that
have been modified, made more cost effective or just dropped. The future
holds more of the same."

DBCP

NARRATION: The companies had their battle plan in place when trouble
erupted over a little-known pesticide - produced by Dow, Occidental and
Shell - called DBCP.

WORKER #1: I worked in the DBCP unit itself manufacturing the chemical.
And now after telling me that I shouldn't worry about anything out there
because it can't hurt me, now to find out that I'm sterile from it, their
answer was, don't worry about that because you can always adopt children.

NARRATION: Talking among themselves, workers had figured out that many
of them could not have children. Company officials claimed there was no
pattern - and no evidence, even though newly-ordered tests proved disturbing.

WORKER #2: They ran a series of four sperm counts on us over a period
of, I guess, two or three months. All my sperm counts came up zero. And
I'd never been told in the whole time I'd been working out at Shell that
this might happen to me.

NARRATION: What the industry also didn't tell was that its own scientists
had known of the dangers for decades.

Dow Chemical Company Biochemical Research Laboratory. July 23, 1958

"Testicular atrophy may result from prolonged repeated exposure. A tentative
hygiene standard of 1 part per million is suggested."

NARRATION: Dow had treated the report as "internal and confidential,"
did not reduce exposure to DBCP - and did not tell the truth.

V.K. ROWE, Dow Chemical Company: It is our regular policy wherever to
totally inform people about what the material is that they're working
with and what its potential is. So I can't say precisely what was said
in one situation. It's generally throughout the company that we try our
best to inform people about what are the hazards, how to avoid them and
what to do if they have an accident - or what.

WORKER #2: The thing that bothers me, I think, more than anything is
the fact that the chemical industry had no interest whatsoever in protecting
us through telling us the dangers of what we were working with.

NARRATION: The companies were neither protecting their workers - nor
their neighbors. An engineer at Occidental had alerted his plant manager.

April 29, 1975. Inter-office memo.

"We are slowly contaminating all wells in our area and two of our own
wells are contaminated to the point of being toxic to animals or humans.
THIS IS A TIME BOMB THAT WE MUST DE-FUSE."

AL MEYERHOFF, FORMER ATTORNEY FOR THE NATURAL RESOURCES DEFENSE COUNCIL:
DBCP was a reproductive toxicant, a very powerful carcinogen. It was found
in drinking water wells throughout the country. It stayed on the market
because to ban it, you first had to have an administrative process within
a Government agency that was under great political pressure from power
people on Capitol Hill. If you put enough hurdles up even the best-intentioned
Government regulator is hamstrung.

NARRATION: The companies kept DBCP on the market for eight more years.
And it would take a decade for the best-intentioned regulators to finally
reduce the exposure level to benzene. By then, the evidence was so overwhelming
the industry did not challenge the regulation. For some, it came too late.

LANDRIGAN: We knew how many chemical workers there were, how many rubber
workers, how many petroleum workers, how many workers in other industries
that were exposed to benzene, and on the basis of knowing how many were
exposed and knowing the levels at which they were exposed, we were able
to calculate how many unnecessary deaths from leukemia resulted from exposures
during that 10-year delay.

MOYERS: How many?

LANDRIGAN: And the number was 492 unnecessary deaths from leukemia.
Deaths that almost certainly would have been prevented if the standard
had been reduced to 1 part per million back in the 1970's.

MOYERS: What are the lessons that you would have us draw from this case
of delay?

LANDRIGAN: Well, I think the most fundamental lesson is that we have
to presume chemicals are guilty until they are proven innocent. What's
needed is an unpolluted political structure that is empowered to set regulations
that protect the public health.

NARRATION: That's not the political structure the industry wanted.

September 8, 1980. Report to the Board.

"The cold fact is that the Congress today has more influence over the
agencies than the White House does.

"For even our best friends in Congress, there's a limit to how long
they'll support us if the public's against us."

WITNESS IN HEARING: The industry's gotten away with murder. That's why
they don't move forward. Because it's cost them some money and some effort,
and if they're not pushed, they won't move.

"We need real muscle, the kind none of your lobbyists are likely
to have as individuals. One growing source of political strength outside
Washington is the Political Action Committees. PAC contributions improve
access to Members."

NARRATION: Through almost two hundred quickly-formed political action
committees, the industry would contribute over six million dollars to
the 1980 election campaign.

"When the time comes to play hardball, we'll try to make good use
of the political muscle you've been helping us develop."

REAGAN INAUGURATION

NARRATION: Ronald Reagan was petrochemical's favorite Presidential candidate.
And four of the top five Senate recipients of the industry's largesse
were Republican challengers who defeated incumbents.

The industry was ready to play hardball.

September 28, 1981. Government Relations Committee. Pebble Beach.

"The Committee believes that the new climate in Washington is more reasoned
and responsive. ...The election of the Reagan Administration appears to
have produced changes which bode well for our industry."

NARRATION: The Reagan team asked business for a wish-list of actions
that could be completed within the first 100 days. In less than a third
that time, the new President signed an executive order that transformed
the battle over the safety of chemicals.

CHANGES FOR THE BETTER

"President Reagan directed EPA to delay proposing or finalizing regulations
until it could be determined that they were cost-effective and necessary."

NARRATION: A prime target was the one law intended to give the Environmental
Protection Agency broad authority to regulate toxic chemicals - the Toxic
Substances Control Act - TSCA.

JACQUELINE WARREN, FORMER ATTORNEY FOR THE NATURAL RESOURCES DEFENSE
COUNCIL: The whole theory of TSCA was that we're not going to keep waiting
until we can count the bodies in the street. We're going to do some preliminary
steps early on, catch the problems in the laboratory, get rid of them,
identify the really bad actors, take some steps to reduce exposures, to
find substitutes for these. That was the theory. It just in practice has
never worked.

NARRATION: Case in point: A class of chemicals known as phthalates.
In 1980, the National Cancer Institute had determined that one phthalate
- DEHP - caused cancer in animals. By the time the Reagan Administration
came to town, the Chemical Manufacturers Association was already spending
hundreds of thousands of dollars on efforts to thwart any regulation.

"We must arm ourselves with cost calculations for alternate environmental
control strategies; and we must feed that information to EPA as early
as possible."

NARRATION: Industry representatives and attorneys met three times with
the number two man at the EPA. No environmental or consumer organizations
were invited - or informed. Jacqueline Warren was one of those closed
out.

WARREN: And we weren't really there to say, "We represent another point
of view on this that you should hear before you decide to go along with
what the industry might be proposing", since their interest is much narrower.
They're interested in their bottom line, their stockholders, their product,
and they're not as interested at all in what the potential health or safety
or environmental effect of exposure to this might be. In fact, they'd
rather keep that quiet if they can.

NARRATION: Although phthalates are widely used in common products from
shower curtains to children's toys, the EPA announced it would take no
action to either ban or limit the uses.

MEYERHOFF: We refer to it as the Toxic Substances Conversation Act.

MOYERS: Because?

MEYERHOFF: They built in obstacle after obstacle and process after process
where it is virtually impossible to get a known high-risk chemical off
the market. There have been very few chemicals that have been actually
banned because of their health risks. That's because chemicals get far
more due process than people do.

MOYERS: Chemicals have more rights than people?

MEYERHOFF: Far more rights than people.

NARRATION: The public protested that the Environmental Protection Agency
had become a captive agency. What the public protested, the industry celebrated.

"Just ten days ago, TSCA celebrated its fifth birthday. The first five
years of TSCA have seen numerous rules proposed by the Agency. To date,
we have seen none of these types of rules finalized."

WARREN: In terms of what we thought TSCA was going to mean, we haven't
made a big dent in getting tested the very large number of chemicals that
are all over the environment and to which people are exposed to all the
time, for which there are some data already available to suggest that
they may be harmful. We're still having to wait until the actual harm
appears, and then try to do something about it.

MOYERS: Who's in charge of the process now? LEMEN: The industry.

MOYERS: Regulating itself?

RICHARD LEMEN Ph.D., FORMER DEPUTY DIRECTOR, NIOSH: They're in charge
of doing that. The government is supposed to, but the industry has so
much control through the lobbying efforts that they actually indeed do
control it themselves.

NARRATION: To this day - almost 25 years after the Toxic Substances
Control Act was enacted - only five types of chemicals, out of thousands,
have been banned under the law.

INSTITUTE, WEST VIRGINIA

NARRATION: August 11, 1985. The accidental release of a toxic cloud
from a Union Carbide plant in Institute, West Virginia sends 134 people
to the hospital. It is only eight months after an explosion at a Union
Carbide plant in Bhopal, India had killed some 2000 people - and injured
200,000 more.

REPORTER: When they told you it was a leak, what was the first thing
that went through your mind?

MAN: India. Because you're so helpless.

WOMAN: They didn't know where it came from, they didn't know what it
was till two days later after it happened. You fumble and stumble and
cause our lives to be turned upside down over things you misplaced - over
500 gallons of this mixture. Now I can see misplacing one or two gallons
of gasoline around your house...

ROBERT KENNEDY, PRESIDENT, UNION CARBIDE: If we don't make those chemicals,
someone will. Someone will make those chemicals, and you know, you can
wish the problems on somebody else. I had a dog once who overly aggressive
and he bit a mailman once. And he missed a mailman about three times.
And I was very upset about it. And I asked a vet finally if she thought
that I could find a good home for that dog. And she said, Mr. Kennedy,
don't give your problem to somebody else. And I think I learned something
by that. I don't think we want to quit.

MAN IN AUDIENCE: When will you listen? I don't want to hear your dog
stories. We're talking about people. And their lives and their homes and
their families. You can have my job if you want it. Because by god, I
can get another job. I can't get another life.

NARRATION: Accidents were but one symptom of our co-existence with industrial
chemicals.

In the late 1980's, people began to agitate for the right to know more
about the chemicals that they - and their children - were being exposed
to.

WOMAN: I don't think we should be afraid any more about talking about
controls on the chemical industry. These are private companies -Carbide,
DuPont, FMC, all of them - whose day to day decisions in those corporate
board rooms are affecting our lives, our children's lives, and the future
generations.

MAN: What about cleaning up the industry? Stop the leaks, for Christ'
sake. Don't kill me. Let's do something.

NARRATION: In California, they did do something. In 1986, citizens themselves
rounded up enough signatures to put the Safe Drinking Water and Toxic
Enforcement Act - Proposition 65 - on the California ballot.

MEYERHOFF: With Prop 65, if you are a manufacturer of a chemical and
you're exposing my family to a health hazard in a consumer product, in
the workplace, in the air and the water, you have to warn me, and that
makes a big difference because the public then doesn't buy the product
and it shifts the burden to the company.

MOYERS: You were really turning the system of regulation upside-down.

MEYERHOFF: Yes. It turned the entire system on its head, and that's
why the chemical industry and agriculture and others in California fought
the law so hard.

NARRATION: Once again, we have learned from the secret documents how
industry planned to fight.

June 4, 1986 California Toxics Initiative.

"A campaign fund of $5 million dollars has been targeted, with a broad
coalition of industry and agricultural interests having been formed to
finance and manage the campaign."

MOYERS: "A total of $150,000 is needed by June 25th for fund-raising,
research, and advertising, an additional $650,000 payable during July,
August, or September."

MEYERHOFF: Well, I always knew there were resources against us. I actually
was unaware of the amount. That actually surprises me that there was quite
that high level of dollars, and that was a lot of money then, to oppose
Prop 65.

NARRATION: But the industry had been caught short; its money came too
late. On election day, California's right-to-know proposition passed -
overwhelmingly.

MEYERHOFF: What the voters were saying is that we don't trust the Government
to protect us any longer from chemicals that cause cancer or birth defects
or other harm, give us the information, tell us when we are at risk, we'll
protect ourselves. That was the basic message. And if you fail to do that,
then you, a chemical company or grower or others, can be fined up to $5,000
per day, per person that isn't warned. Prop 65 put the fear of God in
the chemical companies, and it had never been there before.

NARRATION: Afraid of aroused public opinion, the companies vowed never
to be caught short again.

"Development of a funding plan which would include an industry-wide
'pledge'..."

MOYERS: ..."pledge" of resources company-by-company, pre-authorization
to commit the funds to individual state campaigns." Does that surprise
you?

SANDY BUCHANAN, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, OHIO CITIZEN ACTION: Well, it helps
me understand why they were able to marshal their forces so quickly in
Ohio and from so far across the country, the idea that they were ready
for it and committed.

MOYERS: But you didn't know about this?

BUCHANAN: No. I didn't know about that until just now.

NARRATION: Sandy Buchanan heads Ohio Citizen Action, the group which
took the lead in getting a right-to-know initiative on the Ohio ballot
in 1992.

MOYERS: Though you didn't know it at the time, I assume you were up
against a lot of that money?

BUCHANAN: We were up against about at least 4.8 million of it.

MOYERS: 4.8 million.

BUCHANAN: That was the final spending on the actual ballot campaign.

MOYERS: By the industry.

BUCHANAN: By the industry in Ohio. They definitely spent more money
than that, though, because at every stage of the process through the legislature
and others, they brought us to court and they tried to challenge the legality
of our petitions.

MOYERS: So the industry spent 4-point--

BUCHANAN: 4.8 million dollars on the ballot.

MOYERS: And how much did you spend in trying to pass it?

BUCHANAN: Oh, about 150,000.

MOYERS: I would say you were outspent.

BUCHANAN: About 50 to 1 or so, yeah.

NARRATION: For the companies, the dollars spent to defeat the initiative
were insurance against the greater loss of being held accountable.

BUCHANAN: If they can't be held liable, if the tools that citizens or
workers can use to try to defend themselves are taken away, then you can
protect the bottom line of a corporation.

MOYERS: It would cost them money if people knew.

BUCHANAN: It would absolutely cost them money.

NARRATION: No state right-to-know initiative has passed since 1986.
And two years ago, industry persuaded Congress to roll back a major right-to
know provision in the Clean Air Act.

TEST RESULTS

NARRATION: Today, an average of twenty new chemicals enter the marketplace
every week. We don't know much about them - and we don't know what they
might be doing to us.

Back at the Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, Dr. Michael McCally was ready
to tell me if residues of the chemical revolution had been found in my
blood.

MOYERS: So what's the news?

DR. MICHAEL McCALLY, VICE-CHAIRMAN, PREVENTIVE MEDICINE, MT. SINAI SCHOOL
OF MEDICINE: We tested for 150 different industrial chemicals, and you
have 84 of those 150.

MOYERS: Wow. Eighty-four.

McCALLY: Eighty-four.

MOYERS: If you had tested me sixty years ago when I was six years old,
would you have found those chemicals?

McCALLY: No. No. With one exception.

MOYERS: What's that?

McCALLY: Lead.

MOYERS: Lead.

McCALLY: Lead. Lead's been around -- we've been -- we've been poisoning
ourselves with lead since, you know, practically the cave ages.

MOYERS: So 83 of these 84 chemicals you found in my blood are there
because of the chemical revolution -

McCALLY: Yes.

MOYERS: -- over the last sixty years.

McCALLY: That's correct. That's correct. And we didn't know this until
we looked, but suddenly we find out that the industry has put a bunch
of chemicals in our body that, you know, are not good for us, and we didn't
have any say in that. That just happened.

MOYERS: What kind of chemicals?

McCALLY: In the PCB case, you have 31 different PCBs of this whole family
of similar chemicals. They are all over the place. And it's probably a
function of where you lived. You lived in some locale where PCBs were
in the environment, and you got them into you through the air you breathed.
Some of them get down in groundwater. Some of them get coated on food.
You didn't get them sort of in one afternoon because you ate a poisoned
apple.

MOYERS: And dioxins?

McCALLY: And dioxins, of all that we measured, you had 13, 13 different
dioxins.

MOYERS: You tested for some pesticides.

McCALLY: Yes. The organophosphates -- malathion is one we may have heard
of because we're spraying it here in New York because of mosquitoes.

MOYERS: I used to spray malathion on my house in Long -- on my yard
in Long Island.

McCALLY: We also measured organochlorine pesticides. The best known
is DDT. DDT hasn't been produced in this country for several decades.

MOYERS: Yes. So where would I have gotten that?

McCALLY: Did you ever, you know, watch them spray the trees when you
were a little kid?

MOYERS: Young man.

McCALLY: A young man? Yes. Okay.

MOYERS: And I lived around places that had used it.

McCALLY: Well, that's enough, because again, like PCBs, these are very
persistent chemicals. They don't -- the body doesn't metabolize them,
doesn't break them down into little pieces and get rid of them.

MOYERS: How do the results of my test compare with others around the
country?

McCALLY: I wish we had more data. I wish I could give you a clear answer
to that. The burdens that you carry are probably biologically less important
than if you were, you know, a 21-year-old woman who was in her ninth week
of pregnancy. And then the fact that you were circulating some DDT might
really be important.

MOYERS: Have these chemicals been tested in terms of what happens when
they are combined?

McCALLY: No. No. That is a complexity that we haven't even looked at.

MOYERS: Have they been tested on vulnerable populations like children?

McCALLY: No. We are just beginning to do that science.

MOYERS: Is it fair to say from all of this that we are, as human beings,
being unwittingly exposed to hundreds of toxic chemicals which have been
tested enough just to know that they're toxic, but not tested enough to
know the risks?

McCALLY: That's a fine summary of the current state of affairs. We know
enough now to know that it doesn't make a lot of sense to make chemicals
that are carcinogenic and add them to our bodies and then argue about
how much we are adding. It just isn't a good idea. Particularly when there
are perfectly acceptable alternatives, and if the industry chose, it could
change our exposures dramatically by its own actions.

NARRATION: Three years ago - on the eve of Earth Day - the Chemical
Manufacturers Association promised that its member companies would begin
to voluntarily test one hundred chemicals a year at an estimated cost
of 26 million dollars.

FRED WEBBER, PRESIDENT, CHEMICAL MANUFACTURERS ASSOCIATION: Our vision
is that we will be highly valued by society for our leadership, for the
benefits of our products and for the responsible and ethical way in which
we conduct our business. It's as simple as that.

NARRATION: Today, we are still waiting for the results of even one of
those tests.

During those three years, the industry poured more than 33 million dollars
into the election campaigns of friendly politicians.

NARRATION: As the secret documents reveal, the promise to test - voluntarily
- was part of a strategy hatched almost a decade ago.

MEYERHOFF: The idea of a chemical company voluntarily testing its product
is not unlike efforts to voluntarily regulate their products. It is an
attempt to pre-empt effective government. It is an attempt to try to stop
the government from doing its job by doing half-baked measures and then
claiming that we're protecting the public.

DR. PHILIP LANDRIGAN, CHAIRMAN, PREVENTIVE MEDICINE, MT. SINAI SCHOOL
OF MEDICINE: There are 80,000 different man-made chemicals that have been
registered with the EPA for possible use in commerce. Of those 80,000,
there are about 15,000 that are actually produced each year in major quantities,
and of those 15,000, only about 43 percent have ever been properly tested
to see whether or not they can cause injury to humans.

NARRATION: The industry's own documents confirm just how little we know.

"The chemical industry has contended that while a few substances pose
a real risk to human health when sufficient exposure occurs, the vast
majority of chemicals do not pose any substantial threat to health. However,
the problem is, very little data exists to broadly respond to the public's
perception and the charges of our opponents."

NARRATION: That is worth repeating. "The problem is, very little data
exists."

In other words, the industry itself acknowledged it could not prove
the majority of chemicals safe.

LAKE CHARLES, LOUISIANA

NARRATION: Lake Charles, Louisiana. In the spring of 1989, the family
of Dan Ross gathered to celebrate their daughter's graduation from college.

ELAINE ROSS: He was always the kind of man that wore denim. Denim shirts,
denim pants. In fact, he got downright indignant if we tried to make him
dress up. We thought that was what was wrong with him. He'd complained
about having a headache that day, and Robin told him - that's our daughter.
She said, Daddy, you're not wearing that to my graduation. You're wearing
a suit. We assumed that the look on his face was that he was mad at all
of us and was gonna let us remember it forever, you know. And we laughed
at him and teased him about it. But afterward, the headache didn't go
away.

NARRATION: Several days later, a CAT scan revealed brain cancer. In
the last words he was able to speak, Dan Ross told his wife, "Mama, they
killed me."

ROSS: You start watching him die one piece at a time, you know. It's
like, okay, he's blind today, but he can still hear, he can still swallow
if I put something in his mouth. But he lost the use of one of his arms,
and then next day it would be the other arm, the next day it would be
one leg. And then he couldn't hear anymore. The hardest part was when
he couldn't speak anymore.

NARRATION: On October 9, 1990, twenty-three years to the day after he
started working at Conoco, Dan Ross died. He was 46 years old.

ROSS: They hurt somebody that meant more to me than my whole life. I
would have gladly taken his place to die. Gladly.

NARRATION: Half a century into the chemical revolution, there is a lot
we don't know about the tens of thousands of chemicals all around us.

What we do know is that breast cancer has risen steadily over the last
four decades. Forty thousand women will die of it in this year alone.

We do know brain cancer among children is up by 26 per cent. We know
testicular cancer among older teenage boys has almost doubled, that infertility
among young adults is up, and so are learning disabilities in children.

We don't know why.

But by the industry's own admission, very little data exists to prove
chemicals safe.

So, we are flying blind. Except the laboratory mice in this vast chemical
experiment are the children.

They have no idea what's happening to them. And neither do we.

PANEL DISCUSSION

MOYERS: Now we want to discuss some of the public policy issues raised
by what we've seen.

With me are Terry Yosie, Vice-President of the American Chemistry Council;
Ted Voorhees, partner in the law firm of Covington & Burling - he represents
the Chemical Trade Association in the Ross case; Ken Cook, President of
the Environmental Working group -- as a matter of disclosure, the foundation
I serve made a small grant to Mr. Cook's organization a few years ago,
but I didn't meet him until three weeks ago -- and Dr. Phil Landrigan,
a pediatrician and chairman of preventative medicine at Mount Sinai School
of Medicine.

Mr. Yosie, thank you very much for coming.

TERRY YOSIE: Thank you.

MOYERS: Given what we've just seen, how can the public rely on what
the chemical industry says about the safety of synthetic chemicals?

YOSIE: Thank you, Mr. Moyers. If I were a member of the viewing audience
tonight, I would be very troubled and anguished if I thought that the
information presented during the proceeding 90 minutes represented a complete
and accurate account of the story. It does not. For nearly two years,
this program has been in preparation. At no time during that two year
period have representatives of this program contacted our industry, asked
us for information, or provided an opportunity for us to appear on the
90-minute segment.

We believe that it is a sad day in American journalism when two sides
of the story can't be told, when accuracy and balance are not featured
in the broadcast. It's our intention in the limited about of time that
we have available this evening to correct some of the errors that we found
in the broadcast, but also to present a more complete picture of who this
industry does and what it represents and the benefit it delivers for the
American people.

How can-- turning to your question Mr. Moyers-- how can the American
people be reassured that the products developed are safe for the intended
uses? We test our products and we report that information to the government.
There are 9,000 chemical products on the marketplace today. They have
been researched, they have been tested, and that information has been
disclosed. We do not do this information alone. We work with some of the
finest universities in the United States: people at Harvard, the University
of California system, the University of Massachusetts-- independent researchers
with world-class reputations.

We have a major partnership with one of this nation's leading environmental
groups, Environmental Defense, and through that partnership we are disclosing
information on those test results no matter what they show. So I believe
this commitment to openness and transparency, to working together to identify
information needs and to disclose this to the public is to pass the greater
confidence in the products we make.

MOYERS: Mr. Cook, do you want to talk about that?

KEN COOK: Well, it's interesting that you raised the question of testing.
As I was struck by so many images in this program, one of the images was
that of the x-rays of these vinyl workers who you had in your industry,
medical doctors examining without telling them why they were examining
them. Their fingers dissolving and this new program you're describing,
the symbol of it is two hands holding a globe. I don't think I will ever
be able to look at the logo for your program without thinking of those
vinyl workers and their dissolving finger bones.

As for testing, one of the things that was striking about Bill's results
as I was thinking about it, was just how little is known about the products
of your industry showing up in people. Do you, for all your testing you're
saying is being done, do you have any idea how many of the products of
your industry, all your companies-- it's a good bit more than 9000-- do
you know how many show up in people? Have you even tested for that?

YOSIE: Let us respond to some of the issues you're raising.

MOYERS: You don't want to answer?

COOK: So you're testing?

YOSIE: I want to respond to the issues that...

MOYERS: Before you do...

YOSIE: I think the viewers deserve our correction of some statements.

MOYERS: Well we'll turn to it in just one minute, but how thoroughly
are these chemicals tested before they come on to the market?

YOSIE: They are tested using the best scientific methods available,
and they are tested not only for their potential hazard, but when we test
a product, when we submit that information to the government, we are using
standards set by our government, but also international standards. We
are applying the best laboratory practices that have been defined by the
scientific community.

We don't do this work in isolation, and when we develop a product, we
have margins of safety so that whatever potential effects there may be,
we develop those products so that they ensure safety many times below
where there could ever be an effect. Subsequent legislation has ratified
that approach that we have taken for many years.

COOK: But this is legislation that you have opposed. I mean, your own
documents show-- whether it's the clean air act, the clean water act,
the safe drinking water act-- straight on through, you can read the documents
now for the first time that you have never made public before, and it's
quite clear that every time there's an attempt to tighten regulation on
your industry to protect citizens, communities from air pollution, water
pollution, your own documents show how you have opposed that.

MOYERS: Let me bring Mr. Voorhees in on this.

TED VOORHEES: Thank you, and let me say that I have met Mrs. Ross, and
I have a tremendous amount of sympathy for her situation having lost her
husband to brain cancer. At a human level I have sympathy, but no amount
of sympathy can justify putting on a program that presents an incomplete,
slanted, and essentially misleading characterization of what happened
with vinyl chloride.

And to take Ken's example of the hands, as the first of a couple of
examples let me give, the show tells the viewer that this hand problem
appeared in the mid 1960's, and that it was treated as confidential and
secret by the industry. What the show doesn't state is that as soon as
that problem was found by B.F. Goodrich company, the doctor who found
that problem in 1967, published his findings in the Journal of the American
Medical Association, which is probably one of the most widely read professional
articles read by doctors, and in that article on the hand problem, Dr.
Creech included the very same x-ray images which you showed on your program
as if they had been hidden and kept secret from people.

MOYERS: Did that document say that it was linked to the exposure of
vinyl chloride?

VOORHEES: It absolutely did, that was the whole subject of the article.

MOYERS: Why didn't the company tell Bernie Skaggs?

VOORHEES: Bernie Skaggs' doctor knew about that because he read it in
the Journal of the American Medical Association.

MOYERS: But why didn't the company tell him?

VOORHEES: The company was telling his doctor -- the person who would
know and who would be able to react to something like that is a professional
who would be able to see the relationship.

MOYERS: I believe the documents show that the company did not tell his
doctor.

VOORHEES: Well, they published the study of the hand problem in the
Journal of the American Medical Association in 1967.

MOYERS: So was the doctor expected to just come across that in random
reading? Why didn't the company tell Bernie Skaggs directly? He worked
for the company, Mr. Voorhees. Why didn't they tell him?

VOORHEES: The Journal of the American Medical Association, JAMA, is
not random reading. It's probably the most widely read professional journal...

MOYERS: Sir, you're not answering the question. Why didn't the company
tell its employees?

VOORHEES: I don't know that they didn't tell Bernie Skaggs.

MOYERS: The documents suggest they didn't.

VOORHEES: The B.F. Goodrich company had a doctor at the plant. He was
the author of this article in JAMA and he would have, as workers came
into see him, he would have explained to them what their problem was and
I would expect that would happen.

MOYERS: Was Bernie Skaggs lying to me when he said the company didn't
tell him?

VOORHEES: I am certainly not going to accuse him of lying, but what
I'm saying is that the doctor at his plant published his findings immediately
in the Journal of the American Medical Association and my point is, the
program has suggested to your viewer that this was an issue that was kept
in secret. Far from keeping it in secret, it was published in the most
widely read journal, and the x-rays that were supposedly kept secret were
a part of that journal article.

YOSIE: 40 years ago is a very long time. 40 years ago there wasn't an
Environmental Protection Agency. 40 years ago there wasn't a clean air
act. I don't believe the viewers of this program are interested so much
in what happened 40 years ago. I believe they are vitally interested in
their own personal health and wellbeing today. They want to know that
if the products that we develop and market are safe for their intended
uses. They want to know if the products that they're using in their homes
are going to benefit them. and I believe the answer is...

MOYERS: Those are the questions that I sent you a month ago and said,
"let's talk about these policy issues."

YOSIE: Those are the questions I absolutely want to address.

MOYERS: What about that?

LANDRIGAN: I think that's really the central question, Bill, Terry.

Today there are many thousands of chemicals on the market. There are
a number of chemicals that are registered with the EPA for commercial
use is not 9,000; it's over 80,000. There's about 3,800 which are called
"high production volume chemicals." A couple of years ago, the Environmental
Defense Fund, the same organization with which the chemical manufacturers
are partnered, did an analysis of those high production volume chemicals
to see what fraction has been tested. Now, to be sure, when the EDF were
seeking information on how many were tested, they had to go to the open
literature. They obviously didn't have access to company documents.

In the open literature they found that only 43%, less than half of these
chemicals had ever been tested for toxicity to humans. When they looked
more deeply, when they asked more sophisticated questions, for example,
what fraction of these chemicals has been tested for their effects on
children's health?

What fraction have been tested for the effects on the developing brain,
the developing immune system, the developing reproductive organs, the
endocrine system of babies? You're down very close to single digits. Around
8% or 10% of chemicals on the market have ever been tested for these effects.

So I think that it has to be said here today that the toxic substances
control act is a well-intentioned piece of legislation, but in its execution,
it has mostly been a failure. It is just not doing an adequate job of
protecting the American public.

YOSIE: There are not 75,000 products on the market today. There are
9,000.

LANDRIGAN: No, there are not 75,000 chemicals on the market, but there
are that many chemicals registered with the EPA for commercial use. And
of the 38,000 high production volume chemicals, fewer than half, less
than half have been tested for their toxicity.

YOSIE: Mr. Moyers, you've had your own body tested and this was shown
to the viewers. What was not shown to the viewers, that the products that
we make probably saved your life. From what I read in the newspapers,
you had a very serious heart operation at about 1994. You had a blockage
in an artery leading to your heart. When your doctors discovered this
problem and advised you and provided the professional counseling and expertise
that made it possible for you to recover to the robust man that you are
today, they were using our products. They diagnosed...

MOYERS: Are you sorry about that now? I mean, don't you wish...?

(laughs)

YOSIE: I am delighted that you're here. You look very healthy. They
diagnosed your problem using technologies that we helped develop. When
they operated on you, they used surgical instruments that we helped develop.
To ensure that you did not contract a subsequent infection post operation,
you were given medicines.

In addition, you were probably given medication afterwards to ensure
your continuing return to health. I believe that your state of well-being
today was directly dependent on the benefits that our industry provided
to you and to every American.

MOYERS: I don't challenge that, and I didn't challenge that in our reporting.
I do not challenge that.

YOSIE: You do not challenge that but you didn't report it either.

MOYERS: You just said it. I told you a month ago we wanted you to come
on and say what you wanted to say and you just did. But here is the issue
that I think that Dr. Landrigan is raising, that my own body burden test
is raising, Dr. McCally said to me, I said to him, "Should I be worried?"

He said, "At your age, 66, I don't think so. But if you were a 21-year-old
pregnant woman, it might be a different story." And he said, "We do not
know what this combination of chemicals, what effect it's having on our
health." This is a new phenomenon. He said, "Your grandfather would not
have had this." This is a new phenomenon. And what I think I was asking
in the broadcast, and what I hear Dr. Landrigan asking is, how do we find
out what this combination of chemicals is doing in our body? Particularly
to children. Are children the most vulnerable?

LANDRIGAN: Children...

YOSIE: Dr. McCally erred in what he told you. He said that 60 years
ago the only compound that you would have in your body was lead. 60 years
ago, American cities looked like an industrial wasteland. They looked
like what Russia or China or Eastern Europe looks like today. 60 years
ago, there were no pollution controls on industry or any other major products.
60 years ago, the area that I come from, Western Pennsylvania, people
had to wear two shirts to go to work. One to wear outside, one to wear
inside.

MOYERS: "Better living through chemistry." I acknowledge that. We all
acknowledge that.

COOK: I think as an environmentalist, I'll defend your industry. But
the thing that surprises me...

YOSIE: Thank you, I'll take that compliment.

COOK: Let's go back to the vinyl story. Again, for the first time now
it are read tens of thousands of pages of documents that you never made
public. If they so strongly defend your position, you never made them
public. Now that they are public, one of the striking things about me
is how you're hiding your light under a bushel basket when it comes to
inventiveness. Those documents clearly show again and again and again
that your industry worried that if vinyl chloride standards were tightened,
it would be the end of the industry. Companies would go bankrupt. They
say this. They could not continue to operate.

None of them did go bankrupt when it went from 500 parts per million
down to one. They all did fine. In fact, they made money. And I think
what I respond to you when you make that point is, yes, there are many
ways which chemicals make a difference in our lives. But there are also
ways in which we can find safer alternatives. And in most cases, the fastest
was to those alternatives is to put pressure on the industry beyond what
you feel now to move you in that direction. You don't go rapidly on your
own, and that's been shown time and again.

YOSIE: Three months ago...

VOORHEES: Can I respond to that?

MOYERS: Sure.

VOORHEES: Since he referred to the vinyl chloride story in the litigation,
and I would say it would be fair for the viewer to think that the program
was about concealment and secrecy. And what the viewer was not shown was
that in each of the episodes that you portrayed in the program where you
would show a document that says confidential or secret, what you failed
to do was to show that shortly after that document was prepared, a study
was published. For example, I'll just give you few examples.

The Viola study in 1970, the first Italian researcher who found some
signs of carcinogenity in laboratory animal experiments, and you showed
a document that said this could potential be problematic and should be
confidential. What you didn't say is that Viola's study on that subject
was published in 1970, the next year after the confidential document.
So the point is, that when we research was being done on these very subjects,
research on... initially on laboratory animals, that the research was
published and there was not one reference in that whole program to the
published articles that followed each of these incidents that are referred
to in the program. To me that's a very misleading presentation.

YOSIE: Three months ago...

MOYERS: Let me just answer Mr. Voorhees. For one thing, it was because
that Dr. Viola was going to publish his findings that the chemical association
meeting took place to discuss what to do about it. And I was really astonished,
Mr. Voorhees, in the materials you sent us before the broadcast which
we examined thoroughly. You were very selective in what you gave us. You
did not include in there the documents that show how the industry did
not want to talk about it, Dr. Maltoni's research, and made plans not
to disclose that to NIOSH, even though NIOSH, the government agency, had
asked for those... that information to be volunteered, and your industry
did not do that. The documents make it clear that they did not talk about
Dr. Maltoni's argument. But that's the past.

I would love to come back to this issue. Look, the people out there
watching this thing, you know, we know our lives are better because of
chemistry. But we also know that pediatricians and physicians like Dr.
Landrigan are saying, we don't know what this new combination is doing
to us. So what is the question? What are the issues?

LANDRIGAN: I that's the... excuse me, Terry. I think the issue, Bill,
is that this is not something of the past. Many of the chemicals, for
example, that were tested last week in that CDC report that was released
to the nation on the 21st of March, are chemicals that reside...

MOYERS: That was the center for disease control, right?

LANDRIGAN: The center for disease control in Atlanta, that's right.

Many of the chemicals which they tested, for example the pesticide products,
are relatively short-lived chemicals. Those are chemicals, when they get
into the body of a child, only stay there for a matter of weeks or at
most a month or two, and then they're gone.

So the chemicals that were measured by CDC in Americans are chemicals
where the exposures are taking place today. And in response to your question,
it's absolutely true that children are the most vulnerable among us to
those chemicals, and kids are vulnerable for two reasons. First of all,
they take more chemicals into their body. They breathe more air. They
drink more water. They eat more food pound for pound. So they take more
chemicals into their body that are present in the air, on their food,
in their water. And of course, kids play on the floor. They drop a lollipop
on the rug. If there's pesticide on that rug, they pick up the lollipop,
they put the lollipop into their mouths and the pesticide gets in.

Then on top of that, besides being more heavily exposed, kids are biologically
more vulnerable. I mean, anybody who has seen a little child-- I've got
a grandson who is just a bit over a year old-- anybody who's got a little
child knows how precious and how vulnerable they are. Their brains are
growing and developing. If a chemical like lead, like a pesticide, like
PCB's, like organic mercury gets into the brain of a baby during those
early months of development, the consequences can be life-long.

YOSIE: Three months ago, the Department of Health and Human Services...
Please, Bill, please, be fair.

LANDRIGAN: What really troubles me here is we don't know... we simply
do not know the long-term consequences of exposures in early life. As
a pediatrician, as a parent, as a grandparent...

MOYERS: But what's the public's policy you'd like to see come out of
this, and I would like to hear Terry Yosie say why the industry wouldn't
support that public policy?

LANDRIGAN: I think we need four things, four things only.

Number one, we need thorough independent testing of chemicals, including
testing that looks at pediatric effects.

YOSIE: That's underway.

LANDRIGAN: Number two, and it needs to be independent of the industry.

YOSIE: Colleagues... Mr. Cook's colleagues in the environmental community
are working directly with us. We just participated in a process with environmental
groups and others to test compounds for their impact on children.

LANDRIGAN: Well, that's... it just leaves...

YOSIE: There is an agreement in place to do just that.

LANDRIGAN: I'm glad. I noticed in the show itself that of promises were
made, the results haven't yet appeared. But the second thing that needs
to be done is that we need to continue the nationwide testing of chemicals
in the bloodstream of Americans that CDC has started. CDC, I understand...

YOSIE: We support that objective.

LANDRIGAN: And that's good, that's good.

YOSIE: We think the CDC report, which by the way, used technology that
we helped develop. Those analytical methods that were used in your body
and used on the recent CDC report are an outgrowth of our commitment to
science to improve better analytical detection techniques. And so we support
CDC's continued efforts to learn more about the health status of the American
people.

LANDRIGAN: Excellent. Number three, I think we need to work together.
And this might actually be an area where the chemical industry and the
environmental community and the academic community can work together.
This is to support a national right-to-know initiative. For this nation,
we ought to have the national equivalent of the Proposition 65 law that
they have in California. Everybody in this country ought to be able to
get good, accurate, unbiased information on every product they buy in
the stores.

And fourthly, on the final need that I think we have to have in this
country, is we need to have a more efficient, more effective process than
we do today to get toxic chemicals off the market and to replace them
with safer chemicals.

That's what America's kids need.

YOSIE: Two comments: One is, Mr. Landrigan, Dr. Landrigan, does raise
the issue of what is the health status of children. Three months ago the
Department of Health and Human Services, which includes the Center for
Disease Control, issued a report. Let me read you a sentence in the very
first paragraph of that report: "We've made life better for our children."
The Department of Health and Human Services, like the CDC, looks at the
broad spectrum of issues that could potentially effect children's health.
And there is some very good news to report.

There are record child immunization rates. There's a decline in youth
drug use and smoking. There is a decline in teenaged mothers giving birth.
There's a decline in infant mortality. But even beyond children, cancer
rates are down.

YOSIE: Life expectancy rates in this country. We are living better and
healthier, not only but because of the products we make but because people
are being more sensible in terms of how they live and how they behave.

LANDRIGAN: The facts don't support... some of what you're saying is
true, but it's very selective.

YOSIE: I'm quoting to the CDC, Phil.

LANDRIGAN: You're quoting part of a 30-page CDC report. Cancer death
rates are down, but the number of new cases of cancer in children is up.
I don't know why they're up, but since 1972, which is when we began to
keep national records in this country, we have experienced a 42%... 41%
increase in the incidents of brain cancer, the number of cases of brain
cancer per thousand children. That is not a reporting artifact. We weren't
missing 40% of brain cancers 30 years ago when I started my pediatric
career. We just weren't. In young men 15-30, there has been a 68% increase
in the incidents of testicular cancer.

Now, you're quite right, American children today live longer. They live
longer because we have conquered most of the infectious diseases in this
country. But the rates of asthma have doubled.

YOSIE: What are the principal health risks that children today. To some
extent they do come from environmental factors, but domestic violence...

LANDRIGAN: Oh, the principal cause of hospitalization of American children
is...

YOSIE: ...lack of access to healthcare, a number of other factors...

MOYERS: Are those not involuntary, but chemicals in our food and chemicals
in our toys are not something that people ask for, they just happen, as
you said I think, or McCally said in the interview, suddenly we've got
all these chemicals in our body.

VOORHEES: These are products that have been very carefully scrutinized
by the scientific community, by government agencies, and as a result...

YOSIE: Let me make one point if I may, one point, if I may.

LANDRIGAN: Why is there...

YOSIE: Phil made the point that we need to take the compounds off the
market. That has been tried in many countries and disaster has resulted.
The nation of Peru stopped chlorinating its water supply. Chlorine is
one of our major products. What happened after that event? A cholera epidemic
broke out and over 10,000 people in Peru and Latin America lost their
life.

LANDRIGAN: And in this country we took tetraethyl lead out of gasoline
American's blood levels have declined 99%.

YOSIE: And proponents of removing chlorine are saying that ought to
be done in this country. There are ten to 25 million people perishing
because of a lack of a drinking water supply.

LANDRIGAN: In this country, over the vigorous objection of the Ethyl
Corporation, we removed tetraethyl lead from gasoline. The average blood
lead level in American children has declined by 90%, and the average IQ
of American babies has increased by three points.

YOSIE: You and I were on the same side of that debate when I served
as the official of the environmental protection agency.

LANDRIGAN: When you were at EPA.

YOSIE: When I was at EPA.

COOK: Yeah, but the companies you represent...

YOSIE: You and I were on the same side of that debate, and we still
are.

MOYERS: What was that, Ken?

COOK: The companies you represent weren't, and that's the point. If
you look at these documents which we now have-- and let me just put in
a plug, ewg.org, you can read 40,000 pages of them going back to 1945
now.

VOORHEES: Well, we have a law firm web site, but I'm not sure people...

MOYERS: (laughs) Ours is pbs.org.

It's only fair that you get a chance to answer this question, because
as I've said to you, investigative journalism is not a collaboration between
the journalist and the subject, and I did lay out there, Sherry Jones
and I laid out, the record of the industry and opposing right to no initiative.

Why has, in every case that I can find, why has your industry opposed
citizens effort to use the right to know initiative and every right to
know efforts?

YOSIE: I think you have your facts wrong.

MOYERS: Tennessee, Hawaii, California, Ohio, Illinois, Massachusetts.

YOSIE: We supported the amendment, the Superfund statute, in 1986, creating
the Toxic Release Inventory. We supported in 1990, the amendment of the
Clean Air Act so that information would be made available to communities
about chemicals that were being used in their neighborhoods. We supported,
with Environmental Defense, the complete and total disclosure of any testing
results going on with our current agreement with them. We had been a strong
supporter of right to know, and here's why.

We have had over the last dozen years, a program that has instituted
over 300 community advisory panels wherever this industry is located in
this country. We have learned a great deal from listening to communities
where we play a major part. One of the greatest testimonials that you
hear about this industry is from people who live near it, because they
have seen the very direct health and environmental progress and the emissions
reductions that result from our industry. When they have a question about
plant safety or noise levels or environmental emissions, they have direct
access to the plant manager. They have access to go inside the plant gates
and see what's going on.

COOK: I've talked to an awful lot of people...

YOSIE: That is why we have 60% decline in emissions over the last decade,
the best of any American industry.

COOK: Well, you almost make it sound as if you volunteered to do that,
and you did not.

YOSIE: We supported those measures.

COOK: Listen, what you selectively may have supported, everyone can
now read what decisions you made and how you made them to take a stand
on clean air and clean water and drinking water, and it's... I respectfully
disagree, it is not as you describe it. No, what these communities are
often left with is just asking a plant manager, "Can you tell us?" No
authority, no power under law to actually compel that information to come
forward. And to get back to the testing point, I just want to, because
there would be some confusion...

MOYERS: We have about 45 seconds.

COOK: There will be some confusion out there. If these chemicals are
so well tested, then how come you had to come forward with a program just
two years ago to voluntarily test the most widely used ones if they were
tested? Some of them have been used for decades.

YOSIE: Because we're a responsible industry. Because we're always seeking
answers to question. We're a science-based...

COOK: About 40 years late.

YOSIE: We're a science-based industry, and by nature we are asking these
questions. There are a million men and women who work in this industry
who apply chemistry to make a variety of products and services. I'm very
proud to represent them here tonight, and as we close this broadcast,
I want to thank them for the contribution they've made to society. They've
made America a better, healthier and safer society. And to the viewing
audience, I want to say that we are committed to continuing to improve
our environmental health and safety performance. I think you all know
that what happened 40 years ago is no reflection of the kind of industry
that we represent today.